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Marie Kondo doesn't really want you to throw away your books

(CNN) Bibliophiles can turn the page on being mad at Marie Kondo now.

The Queen of decluttering has run afoul of some book lovers with her Netflix series, "Tidying Up with Marie Kondo."

Netflix has people (serenely) bulldozing their closets, and thrift stores are riding the wave

Kondo has been spreading her message of minimalism in the home, and her viewpoint of keeping only 30 books wasn't exactly embraced by some.

"I'm told that tidying up expert Marie Kondo says you should only keep 30 books so you can prevent clutter and I'm over here like '30 books on my nightstand, you mean?'" National Review writer Alexandra DeSanctis jokingly tweeted.

Other criticism was more harsh, leading to a backlash over the backlash and accusations that Kondo, who is Japanese, was the target of racism.

"People didn't seem to have a problem with Marie Kondo and her tidying up method when they didn't consciously know she was non-white and non-American," one person tweeted. "Y'all her book came out years ago and was a bestseller, but the minute her face and voice appeared, then the racists came out."

The story is not over, however.

"The most important part of this process of tidying is to always think about what you have and about the discovery of your sense of value, what you value that is important," Kondo told IndieWire, through her interpreter Marie Iida, who also appears on the series.

Related: Marie Kondo's tidying isn't just about appearances. There's a psychological and spiritual upside, too

"It's not so much what I personally think about books," the best-selling author said. "The question you should be asking is what do you think about books."

Kondo added, "If the image of someone getting rid of books or having only a few books makes you angry, that should tell you how passionate you are about books, what's clearly so important in your life."

"If that riles you up, that tells you something you about that," she said. "That in itself is a very important benefit of this process."

And that, ladies and gentleman, is how you graciously read your haters.

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